Why do we write reflectively?

Reflecting on an experience involves drawing on current understandings to think deeply and purposefully about what can be learned from the experience. The purpose of academic or professional reflection is to transform practice in some way, whether it is the practice of learning or the practice of the discipline or the profession.

This form of writing is a process where you can learn from your experiences and connect theory with practice in your professional field or discipline. It can help you become more aware of assumptions and preconceived ideas, and it can help you to plan future actions.

How to write reflectively

Reflective writing can take many forms, depending on the discipline being studied and the assignment structure. More formal reflective essays or reports have a clear structure with an introduction, body and conclusion. Less formal reflective writing, such as blogs, discussion entries or ongoing journals, may not be organised in such a distinct way. Reflective constructions in some discipline areas may also involve multimedia elements or performances.

All reflective writing, however, has certain key features you need to include that relate to the 4Rs of reflection:

1. Report (describe) an issue or experience and explain why it is important to your professional practice. Give your initial response to the experience or issue.

Recount the experience or issue on which you have chosen to reflect. Explain what happened and in what context. Your initial response to the experience or issue can show where you stood before you started to analyse the situation.

2. Relate the issue / experience to your own skills, professional experience or discipline knowledge.

Describe any similar or related experiences you've had and whether the conditions were the same or different. Make connections between this and your previous knowledge and experience of similar situations.

3. Reason about (discuss) the issue / incident to show an understanding of how things work in this discipline or professional field.

You should highlight significant factors in the experience showing why they are important for a new understanding. Relate these back to the academic literature including theoretical or research-based literature as appropriate. Use qualitative and/or quantitative evidence where appropriate. Discuss different perspectives involved, e.g. ethical, social, legal, organisational, professional.

4. Reconstruct your understanding or future practice

Outline the changes in your understanding and/or behaviour as a result of the experience and your reflection upon it. Explain the implications for this in your future professional practice. What actions will you take and why?

Please Note:

Some faculties use the STAR-L model in QUT ePortfolio as a guide to reflection on how one dealt with a situation or task. The 4Rs can be used alongside STAR-L [50KB] to guide deeper reflection on what you learnt from your experience and how this will change your future practice.

Checklist for reflective writing

Have I:

Reported (described) the issue or experience upon which I am reflecting?

Explained the relevance of the issue or experience to my future professional practice?

Described my own response to the experience?

Reasoned about the significant factors in the situation (using academic literature/theory)?